Return to a ‘managed market’?
As questions about the size and shape of UK higher education persist, debates about the part number controls could play are making a comeback

As questions about the size and shape of UK higher education persist, debates about the part number controls could play are making a comeback

Turn on the caps: Should England reintroduce student number controls?

There’s no silver bullet when it comes to interdisciplinary success, data from inaugural THE ranking show

The president of Technical University of Munich explains his recipe for breaking down silos while retaining deep disciplinary strength

English fee rise does little to relieve pressure on institutions, with increased staff costs likely to swallow additional funding

Journalism professor discusses identifying misinformation in Hong Kong, how deep-fakes are complicating fact-checking and transitioning from practice to research

Single-sex colleges provide safe space for women but may be financially unviable as enrolments decline

Hepi paper says keeping papers under lock and key could be harming student learning

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

‘Consultancy addiction’ contributes to boom-bust hiring practices in a sector where executives routinely ‘out-earn the premier’

Academics who rely on the British Library’s unmatched collection are still feeling the impact of a devastating cyberattack a year ago. Jack Grove hears from those affected and considers how another...

The removal of recruitment caps in 2015 was hailed by ministers as a boon to institutions’ and students’ ambitions. But the tuition fee’s declining value and the Russell Group’s ever-growing market...

Encouraged to use ChatGPT to help them with the hard stuff, my students let it do all their thinking for them. Maybe I should give up, says Dan Sarofian-Butin

Announcement follows the departure of 400 staff members last year as efforts to close budget black hole continue

President-elect says ally will ‘send education back to the states’ after pledging to get rid of department entirely